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Through the Waters

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Through the Waters is the blog of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Christian vocation ministries. Because the ministry of Christian vocation affirms the need for all baptized Christians – including Presbyterians - to identify and claim their call to discipleship in each decision and life choice, this blog is designed to serve as a resource for youth and young adults, as well as those in ministry with them, to assist the Holy Spirit in God’s movement in this journey through the waters. Take some time to read and think about your own responses to the questions posed here. For additional resources, we suggest that you visit our website.

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August 24, 2010

Day by Day

I had never been iDSC01132n a book group. I admit it. I read a lot of the books that these groups typically read and discuss but until recently, I’d never participated in the conversation that comes from them. Never say never, right? Well, several of my colleagues and I have begun meeting every other week in a book group devoted to reading about ministry with young adults. So it’s not your typical group but is fascinating nonetheless. Lately, we’ve been immersed in Christian Smith’s Souls in Transition: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of Emerging Adults. It is full of research, charts, and statistics but it has been pure food for thought for this talkative group.

This past week I came across one chart that I’ve found myself flipping back to several times since. The book, focused on research of the spiritual lives of 18 to 23-year-olds, actually has roots much earlier than that. Smith’s initial work was with 13 to 17-year-olds (detailed in his book Soul Searching). As these young people grew, he and his team have gone back to track them now, as emerging adults.  The chart that has stuck with me is one comparing the responses then and now, related to the importance of faith in daily life.

I don’t think I need to go too deep into the specifics except to say that the importance of faith in daily life decreased from the age of a high schooler to that of an emerging adult. The numbers aren’t drastic and through Smith’s interpretation I learn that the decline is not even considered major. But it did get me thinking. If faith is not a part of our daily life then what is it? And why the change from the age that typically lives in a home with parents or guardians to the age in which most of us experience our first taste of more independent living?

I don’t have the answers and none of the other members of this, my first book group, did either. Instead, it gives me, and maybe you, the opportunity to think about our own responses.


If faith is not a part of our daily life then what is it?


If faith was more a part of your daily life in the past, what changed?


If the question was related to the importance of money, for instance, as a part of daily life, how would the answer be different? Why?